Energy-dependent scaling of incoherent spectral weight and the origin of the waterfalls in high-Tc cuprates
Qiang Wang, Zhe Sun, Eli Rotenberg, Helmuth Berger, Hiroshi Eisaki,, Yoshihiro Aiura, D. S. Dessau

TL;DR
This study reveals that the high-energy anomaly or waterfall feature in cuprate superconductors arises from a relationship between incoherent and coherent spectral weights, influenced by matrix element effects, without requiring specific energy scales.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the waterfall phenomenon results from spectral weight relationships and matrix effects, challenging the idea of a specific many-body energy scale causing it.
Findings
Incoherent spectral weight is linked to dispersive coherent weight.
Waterfall behavior is influenced by matrix element effects.
No specific high-energy scale is necessary to explain the anomaly.
Abstract
The exotic physics in condensed matter systems, such as high-Tc superconductivity in cuprates, is due to the properties of the elementary excitations and their interactions. The dispersion of the electronic states revealed by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) provides a chance to understand these excitations. Recently, a "high energy anomaly" or "waterfall-like" feature in cuprates' dispersion has been reported and studied theoretically. Most of the current views argue that it is the result of some many-body effect at a specific high energy scale (e.g. ~ 0.3eV), though there are other arguments that this is an artificial effect. Here, we report a systematic ARPES study on the "high energy anomaly" in Bi2212 samples over multiple Brillouin zones and with a large variety of ARPES matrix elements. We find that the incoherent weight of the electron spectral function at high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Superconducting Materials and Applications
